CD is "out of sight the best physiological observer and experimenter that Botany ever saw".

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Laments how much he [JDH] missed when doing the Listera ["Functions and structure of the rostellum of Listera ovata", Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. 144 (1854): 259–64].

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Illness of wife and father.

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"More plants from Fernando Po and more European".

Transcription

Royal Gardens Kew

June 28/62

My dear Darwin

I am distressed indeed to hear of your suffering. & can only hope it may be
transient, & long of returning.

Berkeley was author of the London Review article, I thought it very well done
indeed. I have read a good deal of the Orchid book &
echoe all he says: you are out of sight the best Physiological observer &
experimenter that Botany ever saw. & I do sometimes feel most confoundedly
humiliated when I think how much I missed when doing the Listera— But
for your loving praise of that paper I should wish it withdrawn— you do warm the cockles of one's heart.

I am still in perplexity— We have found no cook yet at all to suit us
& I have determined to send the children to Worthing with the Governess, who
seems a capital person, & if possible take my wife to
Switzerland for a fortnight— She seems to go down hill steadily, &
complains of shortness of breathing & palpitation of heart— Whether it
is all weakness (as the Doctors say) or symptoms of the affliction her father died of,
God only knows, & I dare not ask myself— I
must get her away but my Father is again laid up with Eczema on the legs, & I do not see how I am to go.

Switzerland is the only place she has the smallest fancy for, I talk of going
next Friday or Saturday & joining Lubbock, but I never
felt less disposed or able to go anywhere than now, when Gen. Plant. Part.
I—is all but, but not quite, through the press & I must leave it at
the last sheets— I wish I knew of any one with whom
I could send my wife.

More plants from Fernando Po & more Europæans!
Sibthorpia Europæa, Bromus giganteus, &
Myosotis
arvensis, or one of its vars (stricta of
authors)

[Berkeley] 1862. See also letter to John Murray, 18 [June 1862], and letter
to J. D. Hooker, 23 June [1862].

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f3 3624.f3

J. D. Hooker 1854a. In Orchids, p. 139,
at the beginning of his discussion of Listera ovata, CD mentioned Hooker's
`highly remarkable' study of the structure of the rostellum, but noted that Hooker had
not attended to the role that insects play in the fertilisation of this flower. Hooker's
name is on CD's presentation list for Orchids (see Correspondence
vol. 10, Appendix IV).

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f4 3624.f4

The governess has not been identified; she had only recently been appointed (see
letter from J. D. Hooker, 19 [June 1862]).

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f5 3624.f5

Frances Harriet Hooker's father, John Stevens Henslow, died in
May 1861 as the result of long-standing heart disease, aggravated by
bronchitis and `congestion of the lungs' (L. Huxley ed. 1918, 2: 60).

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f6 3624.f6

William Jackson Hooker.

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f7 3624.f7

John Lubbock visited Switzerland in the summer of 1862 in order to examine
the sites of prehistoric lake-dwellings, the recent discovery and examination of which
he had described in a paper for the January number of the
Natural History
Review (Lubbock 1862b; see also
Lubbock 1862a). See Hutchinson 1914, 1: 56, John Lubbock's diary
(British Museum, Add. Ms. 62679: 64 r.), and letter from John Lubbock,
23 August 1862).

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f8 3624.f8

The first part of Genera plantarum (Bentham and Hooker 1862--83)
was published on 7 August 1862 (Stearn 1956, p. 130).

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f9 3624.f9

In a paper read before the Linnean Society of London in 1861
(J. D. Hooker 1862b), Hooker had described the plants sent by
Gustav Mann from the mountainous interior of the West African island of Fernando Po,
noting that of the forty-eight temperate genera represented, only twelve were
not European, and that nine of the species were European. This provided CD with
further evidence for his claim, made in Origin, pp. 365--82, that
during the glacial period the whole world, or large parts of it, had been simultaneously
much colder than at present, allowing northern temperate species to migrate into
tropical regions. CD added Hooker's evidence from Fernando Po to his discussion of this
topic in the fourth edition of Origin (p. 445). See also letter to
J. D. Hooker, 9 May [1862] and n. 6.

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f10 3624.f10

At the International Exhibition of 1862, Hooker was a member of the jury for class
4, section C, `Vegetable substances used in manufactures, &c.', and an associate
juror for class 3, section B, `Drysaltery, grocery, and preparations of food as sold for
consumption' (Reports by the juries).